Taking a taut, sometimes abrasive, though always immediate approach to a
black media perspective, the multicultural current affairs/documentary programme
The Bandung File was one of the conspicuous successes of early Channel 4.

Commissioned by Farrukh Dhondy, Channel 4's editor for multicultural
programmes, in a determined move away from the earlier Channel 4 programmes for
ethnic minorities (which had mixed showbiz and politics, with an Afro-Asian
slant), the series was produced by Bandung Productions under the joint programme
editorship of Tariq Ali and Darcus Howe.

The company took its name from the 1955 conference held in Bandung,
Indonesia, which had been the meeting point for the leaders of the
post-colonial, newly independent states of Africa and Asia. Following in the
spirit of the original conference, both Bandung Productions and The Bandung File
were created to present the interests of the Afro-Caribbean and Asian
communities in Britain.

The Bandung File filled the niche vacated by Eastern Eye (1982-85) and Black
on Black (1982-85) - two series axed by Dhondy in an unpopular decision - and
offered the concept of a multicultural, multi-ethnic style of journalism capable
of engaging the culture and politics of the Third World.

The series' first three programmes, though varying in formats, presented the
forceful, head-on style, often in the glare of controversy, of investigative
journalism that the series became associated with. 'A License to Kill' (tx.
12/9/1985) reported on the racial murders of young Arabs by whites in France;
'Too Many Questions' (tx. 19/9/1985) looked for the first time at the British
Immigration service at Heathrow and Dover, and showed how those seeking entry
into the UK were treated by immigration officers; 'Till Death Us Do Part -
Labour and the Black Vote' (tx. 26/9/1985) alleged that some of Labour deputy
Roy Hattersley's Asian supporters in his Birmingham constituency had signed up
fake members in an effort to secure his position as parliamentary candidate.

After some four-and-a-half successful years on air, the programme was brought
to an unexpected close, reportedly in line with Channel 4's policy of resting
'tried and trusted strands' while they were still successes. The Bandung File
ended, in December 1989, with an edition characteristic of the programme's
purpose: a profile of Egyptian novelist and poet Naguib Mahfouz, the only Arab
ever to win the Novel Prize for literature.